I like Snot!

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jjohnwm

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Mar 29, 2019
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Manitoba, Canada
Yes, I admit it: I like Snot. I know lots of folks think Snot is utterly disgusting, but I don't care. I think Snot is great!

Snot is a leech that appeared mysteriously, along with several of his kin, in my outdoor pond years back. He and his buddies would very occasionally be observed displaying their graceful swimming style in broad daylight, but they were generally very secretive. The original Snot lived for a good long while in an indoor tank with fish, shrimp, etc. but was sadly found dead one morning of unknown causes. Snot II replaced him, and has thrived for at least a couple years now, growing to heroic proportions. I managed to snap a quick pic of him a day or two ago on one of his rare diurnal excursions, apparently lured into the open by a heavy feeding of Hikari Ocean Plankton.

Snot is, like the majority of leeches, not a bloodsucker. He is a scavenger who subsists on various organic debris found on the bottom. I have never observed him interfering with any of his tankmates in any way; this includes the smallest of fish and fry, and even shrimp and their newly hatched young. His swimming is sinuous and lovely; his undulations are like those of a snake, but in a vertical plane rather than a horizontal one. He is an absolute joy to watch when he swims, and if you belong to the school of aquariological thought that recognizes a "clean-up crew" as an essential part of a tank, one that performs work that properly should be done by you...well, a nice big leech is just about the perfect member of that crew. He does the job, doesn't bother anybody, is ignored by everybody, and looks impressive as hell in the process.

Sadly, I wasn't able to get a pic of him swimming; instead, he is stretching himself out to near maximum length as he inch-worms his way across the bottom. He's much less impressive moving this way, but it shows off his prodigious growth to best advantage. My pic shows my Chinese HiFin Shark just behind Snot; the HiFin is roughly 4.5 inches in length, and Snot is well over 9 inches when fully extended.
leech.jpg
Neither Snot (the original), nor Snot II, nor Snot III (another slightly smaller incarnation of Snot in another tank) is a wet pet for everybody. An aquarist whose interest lies only in fish with pedigrees, or whose tanks cannot have algae, or whose finger is constantly hovering over the Panic button in case some horrifying bug or critter dares to show itself...well, that person need not apply. But if you are thrilled when a new species of spider appears in your basement, if you devoted much of your miss-spent youth to turning over logs and stones to look for critters, or if you find beauty in things like insects and snakes and warthogs...hey, you need to get you some Snot. :)
 
The definitive leech movie, IMHO, will always be The Great Outdoors, with Dan Ackroyd and John Candy.

The guys and their families go fishing with leeches, doze off in the sunshine, and awake to find themselves covered with the leeches.

They react...poorly...😆🤣😂

Dang...I wish I could find a link to that wonderful clip...:)
 
Yessss! That's the one! Thank you, sir! :)

Lol, the look on Ackroyd's face when he sees the leeches on other people, points at them...and then realizes they are on his own hands also....classic! :ROFL:


Yeah...I'm easily amused...:)
 
Snot, omg my nightmare
That's a shame...you don't know what you're missing. :)

Had to re-visit this thread to update. Snot II has been unusually active and visible lately...meaning that I have seen him crawling a couple more times and even swimming once since I posted last. That is an extremely high level of activity by his standards; I hope everything is okay with him. He seems fit and trim and healthy...

By some stroke of luck, my younger granddaughters were visiting when he went for a swim. They haven't seen any of the Snot clan since bestowing that name on the original years ago, but they occasionally ask. This time, they and I went downstairs to do a quick feeding and inspection, and there he was, smoothly moving through the water like a Sine Wave From Hell. The girls went nuts; the older one immediately asked if they could have a leech of their own. I, brave stalwart that I am, told them to ask their mother. That quickly led to some interesting conversational exchanges for the rest of the day.

I squirmed off the hook by explaining that since we are still locked in the frozen wonderland of winter, there was no point in dwelling on the question as there's no way to catch one. Live leeches for bait are scheduled to become illegal in a little over a year here, so bait shops and leech farms...yes, there are leech farms...have pretty much ended the trade in them.

I settled in after supper under the frosty glare of my daughter-in-law, the girls' mother. But the girls wouldn't relent. The precocious older one found a website, leeches.com, which sells...well, I guess you know what they sell. Several varieties of exotic leeches, in all sizes and even grouped together as combo packs, along with all the paraphernalia a budding leech enthusiast needs to get the most from his new pets. You want a Giant Asian Buffalo Leech? They're on sale right now for a mere $336 Canadian! To their credit, the website warns that Buffalo Leeches are a bit more demanding in their care requirements than some types, but they also have the aptly named Dracula Leeches, European Hirudo Leeches (very colourful!), and the enticing Kiss Of The Vampire "Transilvania" Leeches, all in the $25 to $40 dollar price range and apparently all good starter leeches for beginners.

All these species are indeed blood-suckers; if leeches make you squirm...you don't want to know how owners feed these things...
 
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